Farmers were forced off their lands during the Dust Bowl in the 1930s. The rains stopped and the topsoil blew off these former grasslands. This scene was repeated throughout the central United States. During long droughts, some people wonder if another dust bowl could come.

Causes of Soil Erosion

The same agents that erode landscapes also erode soil. They are water, wind, ice, or gravity. Running water is the leading cause of soil erosion. Water is abundant and has a lot of power. Wind is also a leading cause of soil erosion. Wind can pick up soil and blow it far away.

Activities that remove vegetation, disturb the ground, or allow the ground to dry are activities that increase erosion. What are some human activities that increase soil erosion?

Farming

The photos in Figurebelow show how farming practices can increase soil erosion. Plant roots penetrate the soil and keep it from eroding. Plowing turns over bare soil and cuts through plant roots. Bare soil is exposed to wind and water. In the past, farmers always plowed fields before planting.

The problem doesn’t stop with plowing. Crops are usually planted in rows, with bare soil in between the rows. In places where crops grow only during part of the year, the land may be bare for a few months.

Farming leaves some soil exposed to erosion.

The soil that is most likely to erode is the nutrient-rich topsoil. The loss of topsoil degrades the farmland.

Grazing

As you can see in Figurebelow, some grazing animals, especially sheep and goats, eat grass right down to the roots. They may even pull the grass entirely out of the ground. Grazing animals can kill the grass. They may thin it out so much that it offers little protection to the soil. If animals are kept in the same place too long, the soil may become completely bare. The bare soil is easily eroded by wind and water.

Sheep and goats can damage plants and leave the soil bare.

Logging, Mining and Construction

Other human actions that put soil at risk include logging, mining, and construction. You can see examples of each in Figurebelow.

When forests are cut down, the soil is suddenly exposed to wind and rain. Without trees, there is no leaf litter to cover the ground and protect the soil. When leaf litter decays, it adds humus and nutrients to the soil.

Mining and construction strip soil off the ground and leave the land bare.

Paved roads and parking lots prevent rainwater from soaking into the ground. This increases runoff and the potential for soil erosion.

Logging, mining, construction, and paving surfaces are some of the ways that soil erosion increases.

Recreation

Even things that people do for fun can expose soil to erosion. For example, overuse of hiking trails can leave bare patches of soil. Off-road vehicles cause even more damage. You can see examples of this in Figurebelow.

What’s fun for people may be bad for soil. Off-road vehicles can destroy plants and leave the ground bare. This sets up the soil for erosion.

Soil erosion is a natural occurrence. However, human activities have greatly accelerated soil erosion. In some locations, soil may now be eroding at about 10 times faster than its natural rate. Since Europeans settled in the United States, about one-third of the topsoil has eroded away.

Vocabulary

Dust Bowl: A period of severe dust storms across the Plains of the US. The worst storms were in 1934 and 1936.

leaf litter: Dead leaves, branches, bark, and other plant parts that accumulate on the floor of a forest.

Summary

Soil erosion is a natural process, but human activities can increase it.

The main agents of soil erosion are water and wind.

Soil erosion is more likely where the ground has been disturbed. Farming, grazing animals, logging, mining, construction, and recreational activities can do this.